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Chapter 33 The Nature and Propagation of Light

Chapter 33 The Nature and Propagation of Light. Reflection and Refraction

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Page 1: Chapter 33 The Nature and Propagation of Light. Reflection and Refraction

Chapter 33The Nature and Propagation of Light

Page 2: Chapter 33 The Nature and Propagation of Light. Reflection and Refraction

Reflection and Refraction

Page 3: Chapter 33 The Nature and Propagation of Light. Reflection and Refraction

Reflection

Page 4: Chapter 33 The Nature and Propagation of Light. Reflection and Refraction

ReflectionWe will focus on specular reflection

Page 5: Chapter 33 The Nature and Propagation of Light. Reflection and Refraction

The Law of Reflection

normal

All angles are measured with respect to the normal.

Page 6: Chapter 33 The Nature and Propagation of Light. Reflection and Refraction

Multiple reflections

Page 7: Chapter 33 The Nature and Propagation of Light. Reflection and Refraction

The image

Page 8: Chapter 33 The Nature and Propagation of Light. Reflection and Refraction

Where is the image?

Trace at least two light rays.The image is at where the rays meet.

Bring a protractor to class and quizzes and exams.

Page 9: Chapter 33 The Nature and Propagation of Light. Reflection and Refraction

Where is the image?

Trace at least two light rays.The image is at where the rays meet.

Page 10: Chapter 33 The Nature and Propagation of Light. Reflection and Refraction

Finding the image

Page 11: Chapter 33 The Nature and Propagation of Light. Reflection and Refraction

Image with multiple reflections

Page 12: Chapter 33 The Nature and Propagation of Light. Reflection and Refraction

Snell’s Law of Refraction

Page 13: Chapter 33 The Nature and Propagation of Light. Reflection and Refraction

Refractive Index

Page 14: Chapter 33 The Nature and Propagation of Light. Reflection and Refraction

Useful facts

Page 15: Chapter 33 The Nature and Propagation of Light. Reflection and Refraction

Reflection and refraction

Page 16: Chapter 33 The Nature and Propagation of Light. Reflection and Refraction

Be careful with the normal

Page 17: Chapter 33 The Nature and Propagation of Light. Reflection and Refraction

More on refractive index

Page 18: Chapter 33 The Nature and Propagation of Light. Reflection and Refraction

Find the refractive index and the speed of light in the liquid

Page 19: Chapter 33 The Nature and Propagation of Light. Reflection and Refraction

Solution

Page 20: Chapter 33 The Nature and Propagation of Light. Reflection and Refraction

Different colors different speed

Page 21: Chapter 33 The Nature and Propagation of Light. Reflection and Refraction

Dispersion

Page 22: Chapter 33 The Nature and Propagation of Light. Reflection and Refraction

What happened to my ruler?

Page 23: Chapter 33 The Nature and Propagation of Light. Reflection and Refraction

Explanation

Page 24: Chapter 33 The Nature and Propagation of Light. Reflection and Refraction

How to catch a fish

Page 25: Chapter 33 The Nature and Propagation of Light. Reflection and Refraction

How to catch a fish

Page 26: Chapter 33 The Nature and Propagation of Light. Reflection and Refraction

The image

Page 27: Chapter 33 The Nature and Propagation of Light. Reflection and Refraction

How to catch a bug

Page 28: Chapter 33 The Nature and Propagation of Light. Reflection and Refraction

Find θair for the following cases:

θwater θair

40°

47°

48°

48.75°

50°

nwater = 1.33

Page 29: Chapter 33 The Nature and Propagation of Light. Reflection and Refraction

Solutionθwater θair

40° 58.7°

47° 76.6°

48° 81.3°

48.75° 89.4°

50° [Error]

Total internal reflection

Page 30: Chapter 33 The Nature and Propagation of Light. Reflection and Refraction

Total Internal Reflection

Page 31: Chapter 33 The Nature and Propagation of Light. Reflection and Refraction

A slightly more accurate picture

Page 32: Chapter 33 The Nature and Propagation of Light. Reflection and Refraction

Total internal reflection (TIR)

Total internal reflection occurs when θincident > θc. It is when all the refracted light disappear and all the light got reflected back.

Page 33: Chapter 33 The Nature and Propagation of Light. Reflection and Refraction

The critical angle, θc

θc is the angle of incident θincident when θrefraction = 90o

Page 34: Chapter 33 The Nature and Propagation of Light. Reflection and Refraction

Wrong Answers!

Define critical angle:X Critical angle is when TIR happens. (Is

what???)X Critical angle is the angle of incidence when

TIR happens. (TIR happens for many values of θincidence)

X Critical angle is the angle when TIR begins. (Which angle???)

Define TIR:X TIR is when the the angle of incidence =

critical angle. (What about θincidence>θc?)X TIR is when the the angle of incidence >

critical angle. (Circular logic)

Page 35: Chapter 33 The Nature and Propagation of Light. Reflection and Refraction

Find the critical angle for diamond in air

Page 36: Chapter 33 The Nature and Propagation of Light. Reflection and Refraction

Shiny diamonds and total internal reflection

Page 37: Chapter 33 The Nature and Propagation of Light. Reflection and Refraction

Cubic Zirconium

Refractive index: 2.15 to 2.18 (diamond: 2.42)Hardness: 8.5 to 9 (diamond: 10)

Ingredients: zirconium oxide, magnesium, calcium

(diamond: carbon)

Page 38: Chapter 33 The Nature and Propagation of Light. Reflection and Refraction

Applications of TIR

Fiberoptics

Page 39: Chapter 33 The Nature and Propagation of Light. Reflection and Refraction

Total internal reflection

Page 40: Chapter 33 The Nature and Propagation of Light. Reflection and Refraction

Polarization

Page 41: Chapter 33 The Nature and Propagation of Light. Reflection and Refraction

Polarizing Filters

Electrons on long polymers (long molecules) that moves only in one direction, hence absorbing energy of the E field in that direction, but let the other direction through.

Page 42: Chapter 33 The Nature and Propagation of Light. Reflection and Refraction

Two filters

Page 43: Chapter 33 The Nature and Propagation of Light. Reflection and Refraction

Intensity Rules for Polarizer

Make sure you know whether the light is polarized or unpolarized!

Page 44: Chapter 33 The Nature and Propagation of Light. Reflection and Refraction

Example with two filters

Page 45: Chapter 33 The Nature and Propagation of Light. Reflection and Refraction

Polarization by Reflection

At the Brewster angle (or polarizing angle) θp, the reflected beam becomes polarized.

Page 46: Chapter 33 The Nature and Propagation of Light. Reflection and Refraction

Brewster’s AngleComplete polarization by reflection occurs when the reflected beam is perpendicular to the refracted beam.

Page 47: Chapter 33 The Nature and Propagation of Light. Reflection and Refraction

Brewster’s AnglePictures taken with polarizers at different angles. The picture on the right has the reflected light removed by the polarizer to minimize reflection.

Page 48: Chapter 33 The Nature and Propagation of Light. Reflection and Refraction

Polarization by Scattering

Page 49: Chapter 33 The Nature and Propagation of Light. Reflection and Refraction

Circular and Elliptical Polarization

Page 50: Chapter 33 The Nature and Propagation of Light. Reflection and Refraction

Circular Polarization

Page 51: Chapter 33 The Nature and Propagation of Light. Reflection and Refraction

Wavelength in different medium

Page 52: Chapter 33 The Nature and Propagation of Light. Reflection and Refraction

Huygen’s PrincipleEvery point of a wave front may be considered the source of secondary wavelets that spread out in all directions with a speed equal to the speed of wave. The final wave is the sum of all these secondary wavelets.

Page 53: Chapter 33 The Nature and Propagation of Light. Reflection and Refraction

Deriving Snell’s Law of Refraction

Page 54: Chapter 33 The Nature and Propagation of Light. Reflection and Refraction

Principle of Least TimeLight always travels between two points in the path that takes the least amount of time.